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Stephen kings the cell
Stephen kings the cell




Although, this novel isn’t in the same league as his earlier apocalyptic novel, The Stand, it is still a cleverly written tale crafted by a master storyteller, who knows how to keep the reader’s attention. However, this is more a horror novel than a cyberpunk offering and King is a master of the genre. The phone-crazies do add an element of telepathy not usually found in the zombie genre. Jordan grinned radiantly.”Neal Stephenson’s a god.” Tech satire or just another zombie tale? Stephen King gives a shout out to cyberpunk writers like William Gibson, Bruce Sterling, John Shirley and Neal Stephenson. Clay refers to him as the “Raggedy Man” another survivor band describe him as “the President of Harvard”, his first appearance comes in Clay’s dream, a dream he finds his fellow travellers have also had. An antagonist emerges halfway through the novel as a leader of the phonies. King keeps the number of principal characters small, making it easy to follow. Clay joins up with Tom and Alice and heads north hoping to find his son in Maine (Stephen King’s home state). Those that didn’t hear the pulse and survived the bloodbath also group together and a struggle for survival begins. The phone crazies evolve, they begin to flock together and develop a sort of telepathy.īy using cellphones, which have become the dominant form of communication in our daily lives, you simultaneously turn the populace into your own conscript army – an army that’s literally afraid of nothing, because it’s insane – The pulse delivered through the mobile phone system wipes clean a person’s mind and sends them back to basics, like a computer rebooted and they become unreasoning killers. Only the few not using a cellphone are spared. Suddenly people attack strangers, break things and speak in wild inarticulate cries (“ Gluh“, “ Rast”), all as a consequence of the brain zapping that the book calls The Pulse. The protagonist, Clay, a phone-phobe was down from Maine touting his graphic novel. As he usually does, King takes the reader straight into the action, on a pleasant October afternoon in downtown Boston everything suddenly goes crazy. If you have a cellphone you are doomed: the girl on the right might survive.Ĭellphones are everywhere these days and that is the cornerstone of this apocalyptic horror story.






Stephen kings the cell